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Association of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction and Components of Metabolic Syndrome Cover

Association of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction and Components of Metabolic Syndrome

Open Access
|Jan 2016

Abstract

The aim of the current study was to find any possible associations between elements of metabolic syndrome and echocardiographic characteristics (grade of diastolic dysfunction) in normoponderal and overweight patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.

A retrospective observational analytical study was performed on 130 patients presenting heart failure with documented ejection fraction over 50%. They were divided into two groups based on their body mass index. The first group included 56 normal weight patients and the second group included 74 overweight patients. Elements of the metabolic syndrome analysed in the current study were arterial hypertension, high triglyceride levels, low HDL-cholesterol and diabetes.

None of the components of metabolic syndrome alone had a role in the evolution of diastolic dysfunction in either group. Three or four elements present in obese patients were negatively associated with grade 2 diastolic dysfunction, high values of blood pressure (over 180/110 mmHg) were more often encountered in obese patients with first and second grade of diastolic dysfunction.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/amma-2015-0078 | Journal eISSN: 2668-7763 | Journal ISSN: 2668-7755
Language: English
Page range: 261 - 264
Submitted on: Jun 23, 2015
Accepted on: Aug 3, 2015
Published on: Jan 19, 2016
Published by: University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2016 Cerghizan Anda-Mihaela, Băţagă Simona, L Cozlea, ID Tarţa, B Chibelean, Căldăraru Carmen, Dogaru G, published by University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology of Targu Mures
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.